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SUCCESSFUL SKILLS
PLANNING AND
REPORTING IN
SOUTH AFRICAN
MUNICIPALITIES
A WORKSHOP FOR SKILLS DEVELOPMENT
FACILITATORS
Developed by
January 2008
1
Index
Section 1: About the new LGSETA Template .......................................................... 3 1.1 Changes to the Template .......................................................................... 4 1.2 What could be of concern (and some solutions!) .................................. 4 1.3 How the new template will assist you ...................................................... 5
Section 2: Understanding Skills Planning and Reporting ..................................... 7 2.1 What is Skills Planning? .............................................................................. 8 2.2 Other Municipal Planning Processes ........................................................ 9 2.3 How does skills planning fit into these other planning processes? ..... 10 2.4 Why is reporting important? .................................................................... 11
Section 3: Getting the Basics Right ....................................................................... 12 Section 4: The Skills Planning & Reporting Process ............................................. 14 4.1 The Planning & Reporting Calendar ....................................................... 15 4.2 The 5 Steps in Detail ................................................................................. 19 4.3 Developing your own Calendar ............................................................. 23
Section 5: The WSP Development Process in Detail ........................................... 26 5.1 Developing a Programme of Action ...................................................... 26 5.2 Checking your HR Database .................................................................. 29 5.3 Analysing Skills Needs ............................................................................. 34 5.4 Identifying Critical and Scarce Skills ...................................................... 44 5.5 Identifying Training Opportunities for the Unemployed ....................... 45 5.6 Development of Draft Training Interventions ......................................... 45 5.7 Researching Training Opportunities, Vendors & Costs ......................... 47 5.8 Prioritising .................................................................................................. 51 5.9 Completing the WSP ................................................................................ 53 5.10 Getting Sign-off ........................................................................................ 53
Section 6: Implementation ................................................................................... 54 5.1 Contracting with Providers ...................................................................... 54
Section 7: Reporting .............................................................................................. 56 7.1 Quarterly Monitoring of the WSP ............................................................. 56 7.2 Annual Training Report ............................................................................ 56
2
About this Workshop
The Local Government SETA (LGSETA) has recently introduced a new
template for skills planning and reporting. The template comes with a
Guideline, which takes you through the template in detail. The purpose of this
workshop is to support Skills Development Facilitators (SDFs) in Municipalities to
use the template in their workplaces. The workshop contains additional
information on completing the template, as well as an introduction to
implementing an improved approach to skills planning and reporting in your
Municipality.
Throughout the workshop material, you will find a number of icons:
���� When you see this icon, you know that you have to write something
���� This icon shows that we are referring to the electronic version of the
template
���� And this icon refers to the Planning and Reporting Guidelines
���� This icon refers to a checklist or similar document that you can use in
the planning and reporting process
���� This icon refers you to further assistance or additional information
You will see that, after some of the exercises, you are requested not to turn
over the page. This is because the ‘answers’ to the questions that you are
asked are generally provided in the text over the page. We are trusting you
on this – just know that the workshop experience will be much more fruitful for
you if you do the exercises as you are requested, and then discuss the
answers with your workshop facilitator.
We hope that you enjoy this workshop, and look forward to your active
participation and feedback, both during and after the programme.
- Have Fun -
3
Section 1: About the new LGSETA Template
���� Open up the template on your laptop and work with the person
sitting next to you to go through the new template, and then answer
the questions that follow
���� List 3 things that you notice are different about the new template:
1.
2.
3.
What worries you about the new template? And how do you think
that you can overcome these concerns?
How do you think the new template will assist you in improving your
approach to skills planning and reporting in your municipality?
Please do not turn over the page
4
1.1 Changes to the Template
1. The major change that you will notice in the new Planning and Reporting
Template issued by the LGSETA is that it has combined both workplace
skills planning and quarterly and annual reporting requirements into one
document.
2. The use of macros and links means that you do need to complete and
submit the template in the electronic format – it will be virtually
impossible to complete this template by hand.
3. We have used new employment categories and sub-categories
throughout the template – this is in line with Department of Labour
requirements
4. There is now an Executive Summary of both the WSP and the Annual
Training Report – these reports are automatically generated from
information that you insert in the plan and report.
5. Other new sections include:
� Section 4.5 – Information on the number of 18.2 learners given
structured work experience.
� Section 9 – Proposed training interventions for the unemployed
� Section 10 – Critical and scarce skills
� Section 11 – ABET training
1.2 What could be of concern (and some solutions!)
1. As stated above, the template needs to be completed in Excel – if you
are not yet confident in Excel, you need some training! Find a training
provider in your area, and show them the template, requesting a training
programme that will specifically enable you to work with the template
(i.e. the learning outcome of your training must be to “complete the
LGSETA Planning and Reporting template”.) Depending on your level of
experience, you may need to complete an introductory Excel training
programme first, so that you understand how Excel works. If you have
5
some experience, it may be that you just need to build your confidence
– play around with the template (remembering to save it under a new
name) – often that’s the best way to learn!
2. The new occupational categories mean that you might have to adjust
your HR data system to report in these categories – there’s more
information on this in Section 5.2 below.
3. You will need to introduce a new and improved approach to skills
planning and reporting – this workshop should help you to do this!
4. The ‘critical and scarce skills’ section looks a bit intimidating –
explanations on working through this section are included in the
Guideline and in this workshop. Remember that this is very important
information that the Department of Labour is trying to collect to ensure
that South Africa has the skills that it needs to continue to grow and
prosper.
���� Remember that the LGSETA Provincial Office is there to help you to
complete the Workplace Skills Plan and Report. Write their name
and contact details below to make sure that you are able to get
hold of them if you need assistance!
Name: ______________________________________________________
Number: ______________________________________________________
e-Mail: ______________________________________________________
1.3 How the new template will assist you
Workplace skills planning and reporting is not just about submitting a
document so that you can get your skills levy-grant from the LGSETA – it is
about building an understanding amongst all stakeholders in your workplace
about the importance of properly skilled people in achieving your
organisational objectives. Municipalities have a critical role to play as they
6
are the ‘coal face’ of service delivery in South Africa, and without people
with the proper skills, we are never going to achieve our national goals. The
new template should enable you to introduce a substantive and effective
approach to skills planning and reporting that will ensure that your
municipality is better able to deliver on it’s commitment to the communities
which it serves.
7
Section 2: Understanding Skills Planning and Reporting
���� Work with the person sitting next to you to answer the questions that
follow:
What is skills planning?
What other planning processes take place in our Municipality?
How does skills planning fit into these other planning processes?
Why is reporting important?
Please do not turn over the page
8
2.1 What is Skills Planning?
If planning can be defined as “(t)he process of setting goals, developing
strategies, and outlining tasks and schedules to accomplish the goals”1, then
skills planning is about setting goals for human resource development,
developing strategies, and outlining tasks and schedules to enable us to
achieve those human resource development goals.
Skills planning is central to the improvement of our overall skills levels in South
Africa – we need to know what skills we require (our goals) and develop
strategies, tasks and schedules to ensure that we build those skills. Similarly, in
a municipality, we need to know “who needs training in what?” in order to
deliver on our Integrated Development Plan objectives. This is the central
question that you will need to answer in submitting your Workplace Skills Plan.
In South African workplaces, the skills planning process is distilled into the
Workplace Skills Plan (WSP). The LGSETA has this to say about WSPs:
“The Workplace Skills Plan is the key strategic planning document relating to
workplace training, career pathing, and employment equity for the
municipality. The Workplace Skills Plan (WSP) must relate to the key municipal
lDP objectives, and to the priority training areas identified in the sector skills
plan. The WSP details the training planned by a municipality in a given
financial year.2”
���� Have you visited the LGSETA website? Go to www.lgseta.co.za – its
got tons of useful stuff!
1 http://www.investorwords.com/3710/planning.html 2 http://www.lgseta.co.za
9
2.2 Other Municipal Planning Processes
2.2.1 The Integrated Development Plan
The key planning process in any Municipality in South Africa is the Integrated
Development Plan (IDP) process.
“Integrated development planning is one of the key tools for local
government to tackle its new developmental role. In contrast to the role
planning has played in the past, integrated development planning is now
seen as a function of municipal management, as part of an integrated
system of planning and delivery. The IDP process is meant to arrive at
decisions on issues such as municipal budgets, land management, promotion
of local economic development and institutional transformation in a
consultative, systematic and strategic manner. Integrated Development
Plans, however, will not only inform the municipal management; they are also
supposed to guide the activities of any agency from the other spheres of
government, corporate service providers, NGOs and the private sector within
the municipal area.”3
Essentially, IDPs are the Municipality’s overall strategic and operational plan –
they describe in detail what the Municipality needs to achieve in order to
meet the expectations of the communities that it serves. IDPs are a critical
point of information for effective skills planning in Municipalities.
���� If you want to know more about IDPs, see the IDP Guide Pack
published by the DPLG (web address below). More importantly, ask
the IDP co-ordinator at your Municipality for a copy of your IDP (if
you haven’t already seen it!)
3 From the Foreword to the DPLG’s Guide Pack (Version V), to be found at
http://www.thedplg.gov.za/subwebsites/publications/idp/guide%20v.pdf
10
2.2.2 The Employment Equity Plan
According to Section 20 of the Employment Equity Act, “all employers must
prepare and implement an employment equity plan, which will help to reach
employment equity in their workplace. Employment equity plans must show –
� objectives for every year;
� affirmative action measures that will be implemented;
� where black people, women and people with disabilities are not
represented –
� numerical goals to reach this;
� timetables; and
� strategies;
� timetables for annual objectives;
� the duration of the plan (not shorter than a year or longer than 5
years);
� procedures that will be used to monitor and evaluate the
implementation of the plan;
� ways to solve disputes about the plan; and
� people responsible for implementing the plan.”4
���� To learn more about Employment Equity, go to the Department of
Labour’s website (www.labour.gov.za) and click on the Employment
Equity link.
2.2.3 The Budget
The budget is one of the most important planning documents, as it outlines
how your municipality will pay for the services that you need to deliver. The
budget is informed by the IDP, and will inform your WSP.
2.3 How does skills planning fit into these other planning processes?
4 http://www.labour.gov.za/basic_guides/bguide_display.jsp?id=5854&programme_id=2670
11
� The IDP tells us what goals we have to achieve as a Municipality –
the WSP tells us who needs training in what in order to achieve those
goals.
� The EE Plan tells us what our employment equity objectives are – the
WSP shows how we will train people from the designated groups
(black people, women and people with disabilities) to ensure that
they are able to take up opportunities that may have been denied
them in the past due to unfair discrimination.
� The budget tells us how much money we have to spend on training
interventions
2.4 Why is reporting important?
It’s all very well to develop detailed plans, but unless we also develop reports,
we will never know whether we have achieved what we set out to do!
Measurement of performance is an increasingly important concept in the
South African Government – we need to tell the people who we serve how
we are doing in meeting their expectations. Reporting also helps us to
identify where we are going wrong, or not proceeding at the pace that we
anticipated. This means that we can take corrective action, and prevent
small problems becoming big problems!
���� Did you know that the South African Government is one of the few
governments in the world that publishes reports on its progress every
two months? Go to www.gov.za and click on the button that says
“Programme of Action”. Here you will find the key deliverables and
reports on the achievement of those deliverables, in each of the
main government clusters – local government falls into the
‘Governance and Administration’ cluster.
12
Section 3: Getting the Basics Right
There are certain ‘minimum requirements’ that you need to have in place
before you can even begin to implement a comprehensive approach to skills
planning and reporting:
���� Work with the person sitting next to you to list what you think are
some of these basic requirements – without these things, skills
planning and reporting will be virtually impossible:
1. ____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
2. ____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
3. ____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
4. ____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
5. ____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
5. ____________________________________________________________
____________________________________________________________
Please do not turn over the page
13
Before you can even begin skills planning and reporting, you need to make
sure that you have the following in place:
1. The municipality has appointed a Skills Development Facilitator (SDF),
and that SDF has been registered with the LGSETA Provincial Office. (The
registration ensures that the municipality is kept up to date with all skills
development initiatives.) Note that even if a municipality has decided to
use an outside consultant to do much of the workplace skills planning
and reporting activities, a municipal employee must still be designated
the Skills Development Facilitator.
2. The municipality has appointed a Training Committee. (See the
organisational rights agreements on www.salgbc.org.za and the LGSETA
SDF Toolkit for more information on Training Committees)
3. The municipality has developed a Human Resource Development (HRD)
policy.
4. The municipality has an up-to-date Human Resource database,
containing accurate information on municipal employees. Note that this
does not need to be a complex IT system, but it must be accurate!
5. The municipality has an up-to-date IDP and Employment Equity Plan
6. The municipality is registered to pay the Skills Development Levy with the
South African Revenue Service (SARS). In terms of the Skills Development
Legislation, all workplaces are required to pay 1% of their total payroll to
SARS as a Skills Development Levy. They can then recover a percentage
of this levy payment in the form of grants from their SETA. Municipalities
should note that, at their 2003 HR Conference, the South African Local
Government Association (SALGA) passed the following resolution in
relation to this 1% levy: “SALGA endorses the need for municipalities to
combat skills challenges beyond legislative compliance, to which all
affected municipalities are to budget more that the 1% stipulated for
employees and take on the broader skills demands of the IDPs and
economic development.”
7. The SDF has received the updated LGSETA Planning and Reporting
Template and Guideline
14
Section 4: The Skills Planning & Reporting Process
One of the critical things that we need to understand about workplace skills
planning is that planning is a process and not an event! At the LGSETA, we
understand that your focus is often simply on ‘filling in the form’ – completing
the WSP template so that you are in compliance with the regulations and are
able to claim your mandatory grant. However, while it is undeniable that the
WSP is a ‘grant release mechanism’ i.e. we use it to release your mandatory
grant, it is so much more than that.
The LGSETA planning and reporting template has been designed to assist you
to better understand and plan for skills development in your municipality.
One of the key tenets of the skills development legislation introduced in South
Africa in 1996 is to enable workplaces to better predict their skills requirements
against their organisational goals – we need to know what the organisation is
going to do, and what skills are needed to enable the organisation to do
those things. This ensures that we are spending our valuable training budgets
on the training that matters most to the organisation – we are not ‘training for
the sake of training’, but are rather building the skills in our municipality which
are necessary to provide the services that we need to provide to our
communities.
This workshop aims to introduce you to the planning process that you should
be undertaking in your municipality on an annual basis, to ensure that, not
only is your workplace skills plan template completed properly, but that you
have clearly and effectively identified the skills that you will need in your
municipality. Because the process described is a participative one, you
should also have built commitment to training and development amongst
employers and employees.
15
4.1 The Planning & Reporting Calendar
The planning and reporting process described in the calendar is a proposal
only – you will need to adapt it to meet your Municipality’s overall planning
and reporting activities. The timing will also depend on the size of your
municipality – the times given here are for a medium-sized municipality: you
may require more or less time. Two important lessons need to be taken from
this calendar:
1. Planning and reporting is a continuous process
2. You can’t begin the WSP process the month before the WSP is due!
There are five major steps in the planning and reporting cycle for
Municipalities:
Planning Reporting
1. Preparation Nov 4. Quarterly Reporting
(Optional)
Sept, Dec,
March
2. Analysis & Planning Dec - Mar
3. Finalisation Apr - June 5. Annual Reporting May/June
Implementation (ongoing)
Each of these steps has a number of activities in it, which are detailed in the
calendar over the page, and later on in this chapter. Again, these steps are
generic, and you may need to add in some depending on the state of skills
development planning and reporting in your municipality.
Note that this calendar begins in November, as that is when the work for your
WSP should begin!
16
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 November SDF to ensure is familiar with Template & Guideline; develop a
programme of action for completing WSP
� Present PoA to senior
management & Training
Committee
SDF to analyse HR data to
ensure is in the correct
format
SDF to ensure that all
providers for second half of
year are contracted
December
SDF to meet with IDP co-ordinator to review IDP & conduct
preliminary analysis
Optional - Collect data for second quarterly report
� Optional - Second
quarterly report submitted
to Training Comm & snr
mgt
January
SDF to meet with EE co-
ordinator to review EE Plan
and to identify training
opportunities
SDF to meet with Disability
Co-ordinator to identify
training opportunities
February SDF to meet with line managers to analyse skills needs against IDP and identify critical and
scarce skills.
SDF to meet with LED co-
ordinator to identify training
for unemployed
17
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4
March SDF to develop draft training plan � Draft training plan
presented to Training
Comm & snr mgt
Optional - Collect data for third quarterly report � Optional - Third quarterly
report submitted to
Training Comm & snr mgt
April
SDF to research training opportunities, vendors & costs, and develop procurement plan
Collect data for Annual Report
May
SDF to procure (but not
contract) providers (TBC end-
June)
SDF to complete balance of WSP
SDF to develop Annual
Report
June
� WSP presented to Training
Comm & snr mgt � WSP presented to Council Finalise WSP
� Submit WSP to LGSETA on
30th June
� Annual report presented
to Training Comm & snr
mgt
� Annual report presented
to Council Finalise Annual Report
� Submit Annual Report to
LGSETA on 30th June
18
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 July
� Financial Year begins
SDF to ensure that all
providers for first half of year
are contracted
SDF to circulate training plan
to all management &
employees
August
September
Optional - Collect data for first quarterly report � Optional - First quarterly
report submitted to
Training Comm & snr mgt
October
19
4.2 The 5 Steps in Detail
WHAT WHEN INFO WILL BE
USED FOR:
FURTHER
RESOURCES IN:
Step 1 - Preparation
SDF to familiarise him/herself
with template and guideline.
Speak to the LGSETA if you have
any concerns or questions
Mid-November Not applicable Not applicable
SDF to develop a ‘programme
of action’ for putting together
the WSP. SDF to present to
senior management and the
Training Committee
Mid-November Not applicable Section 5.1
SDF to analyse data available
on HRD database – check that
it is in the required format (HR
Department to update/re-align
database IF REQUIRED, by end-
May)
End-November
Sections 4.1 –
4.6, 5.1, 10.1,
and 11 of the
Template
Section 5.2
20
Step 2 – Analysis & Planning
SDF to meet with IDP co-
ordinator to review IDP and
conduct preliminary analysis
Mid-December Section 6 of the
Template Section 5.3
SDF to meet with Employment
Equity Co-ordinator to review EE
plan and numerical goals;
identify training opportunities
Mid-January Section 6 of the
Template Section 5.3
SDF to meet with Disability Co-
ordinator to identify training
opportunities
End-January Section 6 of the
Template Section 5.3
SDF to meet with line managers
to analyse skills needs against
the IDP, and identify critical &
scarce skills
Mid-February Section 6 of the
Template
Section 5.3 and
5.4
SDF to meet with LED Co-
ordinator to identify training
opportunities for the
unemployed
End-February Section 9 of the
Template Section 5.5
21
SDF to develop draft training
interventions and present to
Training Committee and to
senior management
Mid-March Section 6 of the
Template Section 5.6
Step 3 - Finalisation
SDF to research training
opportunities, vendors, and
costs, and prioritise training
interventions
End-April
Sections 8, 9,
11 and 12 of
the Template
Section 5.7 and
5.8
SDF to complete balance of
WSP End-May
All sections of
the Template Section 5.9
SDF to present completed WSP
to Management and Training
Committee, and to Council,
and get sign off
Mid-June Signatories Section 5.10
22
Step 4 –
Quarterly
Reporting If required, SDF to collect data
for quarterly report, develop
quarterly report, submit to
Training Comm and senior
management for approval
End-Sept, end-
Dec, end
March
Sections 3, 8 &
11 of the
Template
Section 7.1
Step 5 –
Annual
Reporting SDF to collect data for annual
report, develop annual report,
submit to Training Comm, senior
management and Council for
approval, and submit to LGSETA
End-June
Sections 1.4, 2,
3, 4.1, 5.1, 8, 9,
10.2, 11, 12, 13
& 14 of the
Template
Section 7.2
Implementation SDF to contract with providers
Mid-July, mid-
Nov N/A Section 6.1
SDF to develop & circulate
training plan End-July N/A Section 6.2
23
4.3 Developing your own Calendar
���� Working on your own, and using the generic calendar as reference, develop a calendar for your municipality
for submission of your next WSP. Remember, you can only start from today’s date (unless of course you have
completed some of the activities already)
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4
November
December
January
25
Week 1 Week 2 Week 3 Week 4 June
� Submit WSP to LGSETA on
30th June
� Submit Annual Report to
LGSETA on 30th June
July � Financial Year begins
August
September
October
26
Section 5: The WSP Development Process in Detail
5.1 Developing a Programme of Action
In order to ensure that you make the prescribed deadline for submitting your
WSP (30th June), you need to make sure that you have carefully thought
through all the steps involved in getting to that important date. And in order
to win support for the skills planning process, you will need to communicate
that programme of action to at least the Training Committee and senior
management. Over time, you might also wish to communicate the
programme of action to all employees, in order to make sure that everyone
understands what is involved in developing a WSP, and the role that they
play.
In developing a programme of action make sure that you:
� Take into account the realities on the ground in your municipality – how
long will it really take to set up meetings, conduct those meetings, do the
work required (what else have you got scheduled for that period) etc.
Think about the other people that have to be involved in the process –
don’t schedule meetings with line managers during a period when they
are going to be busy with their own processes.
� Check the dates of existing meetings – particularly for senior managers
and Council – and work your presentations around that. For example, if
the closest Council meeting to the submission of the WSP is the end of
May, then you need to make sure that you have completed the WSP by
then.
� Build in some time for delays and uncertainties – don’t schedule the
presentation of the WSP to Council for the 29th June! Make sure that
there is time to make adjustments and corrections.
27
���� The template over the page can be used to develop a PoA. You
will receive an electronic version of this template from your
facilitator – adapt it to meet your needs.
In the “Activity” column you need to list all of the high-level activities
that must be completed, in their logical order, to submit the WSP on
time. There should be a logical progression from one activity to the
next – no steps should be omitted and as far as possible the
activities must be listed in the order in which they must take place.
(Of course certain activities will take place simultaneously).
Activities must be specific (clearly described). There must be no
confusion as to whether or not a activity has actually been
completed or not.
In the “Duration” column you need to fill in the time required to
complete each activity, and the “Start and End Dates” columns
contain the start and end dates for that activity. The duration refers
to the total period of time that must be allowed to complete the
activity, rather than the time period during which the responsible
person will actually be working on it. For example, negotiating a
contract with a supplier may only require 2 days of actual work, but
it could take one month to get that work done. In this case the 2
days is the duration, and the start and end dates will reflect that one
month. It is important to ensure that the time allowed is realistic. You,
as the SDF, are making an advance commitment to this time
standard, and will be held to it. It is also important that there is a
logical progression between start and end dates for related
activities. For example, if activity 3 must be fully completed before
activity 6 can begin at all, then activity 3 cannot have an end date
of January, and activity 6 a start date of December.
29
5.2 Checking your HR Database
One of the key aspects of the WSP is presenting data on the employees in
your Municipality. To do this, you need to use the HR database maintained
by the Personnel/HR Department. The WSP requires that the employee data is
reflected in a very particular way, and the database needs to be able to
provide it.
The following information on each employee is required:
� Occupational Category, using the DoL’s new Organising Framework for
Occupations list
���� See Section 5 of the Planning and Reporting Guidelines for how
these relate to the ‘old’ Employment Categories
� Job titles, which are matched to the job titles used for the Department of
Labour’s Scarce and Critical Skills information (Part 10.1 of the template)
� Work area, for SOCs 200 – 800
���� See Section 5 of the Planning and Reporting Guidelines for more
information on work areas
� Race (African, Coloured, Indian and White)
� Gender
� Disability, using the Employment Equity Act definition of disability:
“People with disabilities means people who have a long term or
recurring physical or mental impairment which substantially limits their
prospects of entering into, or advancement in, employment”
� Age
� Educational level (expressed in NQF terms)
In addition, the HR database must be able to provide information on the
following:
� New recruits – race, age, gender, disability and employment category
30
� New labour market entrants – of the new recruits and also in terms of
race, age, gender, disability and employment category
� Number of interns given structured work experience – in terms of race,
gender, disability and work area
� Number of 18.2 learners given structured work experience – in terms of
race, gender, disability and work area
� Number of employees who left the municipality – in terms of race, age,
gender, disability, employment category and reason for leaving.
���� Use the checklist over the page to work with your Personnel/HR
Department to make sure that all the information is available. If this
information is not available, then the database will have to be
updated/re-aligned. You will need this updated information from
the HR Department by the end of May at the latest, so make sure
that they are able to meet this deadline. See Section 5.2.1 below for
assistance in aligning job titles with employment categories, if this is
a problem in your municipality.
31
Information Required for WSP ����
Occupational categories
Job titles
Work areas
Race
Gender
Disability
Age
Educational levels in NQF terms
New recruits
New labour market entrants
Interns
18.2 learners
Employees who have left & reasons for leaving
32
5.2.1 Matching Job Titles to Employment Categories
As discussed above, you need to place employees in the defined
Employment Categories. The easiest way to do this is to look at your job titles.
Some of this work has already been done for you:
����
Open up the template on your laptop and look at Section 10.1. This
section gives a number of ‘Occupation Names’ (or job titles) in
each of the Employment Categories. Also listed are alternative titles
or specialisations. Most, if not all, of the job titles that you use in your
municipality should appear here ….
And if they don’t appear, try using these definitions of the OFO Employment
Categories to slot them in:
SOC 100 Legislators LEGISLATORS and ELECTED LEADERS represent the
interests of people in constituencies as elected
members of government and local government.
SOC 100 Directors and
Corporate Managers
MANAGERS coordinate and direct functions of
government, commercial, agricultural, industrial and
non-profit enterprises and organisations, or
departments or sections within them.
SOC 200 Professionals PROFESSIONALS perform analytical, conceptual and
creative tasks through the application of theoretical
knowledge and experience in the fields of the arts,
media, business, design, engineering, physical and
life sciences, transport, education, health,
information and communication technology, the
law, social science and social welfare.
SOC 300 Technicians
and Trade Workers
TECHNICIANS AND TRADES WORKERS perform a
variety of skilled tasks, applying broad or in depth
technical, trade or industry specific knowledge,
often in support of scientific, engineering, building
and manufacturing activities.
SOC 400 Community
and Personal Service
Workers
COMMUNITY AND PERSONAL SERVICE WORKERS
assist Health Professionals in the provision of patient
care, provide information and support on a range of
social welfare matters, and provide other services in
the areas of aged and child care, education
33
support, hospitality, defence, policing and
emergency services, security, travel and tourism,
fitness, sports and personal services.
SOC 500 Clerical and
Administrative Workers
CLERICAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE WORKERS provide
support to managers, professionals and
organisations by organising, storing, manipulating
and retrieving information.
SOC 700 Machine
Operators and Drivers
MACHINERY OPERATORS AND DRIVERS operate
machines, plant, vehicles and other equipment to
perform a range of agricultural, manufacturing and
construction functions, move materials, and
transport passengers and freight.
SOC 800 Elementary
Workers
ELEMENTARY WORKERS perform a variety of routine
and repetitive physical tasks using hand and power
tools, and machines either as an individual or as part
of a team assisting more skilled Workers such as
Trades Workers, and Plant and Machine Operators.
Note that ‘Skilled Agricultural and Fisheries Workers’ has been removed from
the list of possible Employment Categories. If you previously had employees
in this category, you will need to re-assign them, using the definitions given
above (they will probably be in either SOC 700 or SOC 800).
34
5.3 Analysing Skills Needs
This is probably the most important part of the WSP, and it’s one which many
SDF’s struggle to complete. The result of this exercise is the completion of
Section 6 of the WSP template:
���� Open up the template on your laptop and look at Section 6. Then
work with the person sitting next to you to answer the questions that
follow:
���� Why is this section so important?
What difficulties might we experience in completing this section?
Where should we start in completing this section?
Who else will we need to involve?
Please do not turn over the page
35
The section on identifying your skills needs against your municipal objectives,
and then linking them to your employment equity objectives and sector skills
priorities is critical because it demonstrates that you are not just ‘training for
the sake of training’ but are rather identifying skills needs against your
municipal objectives – you are asking “who needs training in what in order to
meet our municipal objectives and reach our employment equity goals.”
This section might be difficult to complete if your IDP or Employment Equity
plan are incomplete or unavailable. Managers might also be unaware of the
contents of these plans. These are all fundamental questions about how your
municipality works, and you will need to work with senior managers to address
these problems.
The place to start in analysing your skills needs is for you to develop a full
understanding of the IDP, and the skills requirements arising from the IDP. You
can then move on to the EE Plan, and look at what skills implications emerge
from that plan. You will also need to work with disability co-ordinator to
understand what training can be provided to offer people with disabilities the
opportunity to progress in your municipality. Finally, you will need to meet
with line managers, and ask them to identify training needs in their section,
against the municipal objectives and EE goals. These meetings should
provide you with all the information that you need to complete Section 6 of
the template, and to develop your training implementation plan.
It is critical that the IDP and Employment Equity managers or officials are
involved in this process from the beginning. The Disability co-ordinator will also
have to be involved. And then you need to include line managers – they are
the people that really know what skills are needed in their units or sections.
The Training Committee will also have an important role to play in discussing
and confirming skills needs.
36
���� Have a look at Section 6 of the Guideline “Linking Skills Planning to
Strategic Objectives”, and make sure that you are completely
comfortable with the concept.
5.3.1 Conducting a Preliminary Analysis
As per the training calendar, you need to familiarise yourself thoroughly with
both the IDP and the EE Plan. You will also need to meet with the Disability
Co-ordinator. When conducting these preliminary analyses, you need to be
asking the following questions:
Of the IDP Co-ordinator Of the EE Co-ordinator
� What are the most critical IDP
objectives for the forthcoming
year?
� Do you think we will be able to
achieve them? If not, why not?
� What skills do you think that our
people will need to achieve these
objectives? In other words, who
needs training in what to achieve
our objectives?
� Do we have all the information in
the IDP to complete the first 3
columns of Section 6 of the
template? (IDP objectives,
municipal objectives, municipal
measures of success) If not, how
can we get this information?
� Where are the main gaps in our EE
profile?
� What training interventions can be
provided to assist in closing these
gaps?
� Are there any specific groups that
need to be targeted in relation to
the provision of training?
Of the Disability Co-ordinator
� Do any of our disabled employees
require training to assist them to
advance in their careers?
� Are there any other training
requirements related to improving
our ability to recruit people with
disabilities?
Write up your notes from these meetings, and keep them for your interviews
with line managers. Remember that you will also have to read through and
make sure that you understand both the IDP and the EE Plan.
37
5.3.2 Interviewing line managers
Line managers are often reluctant to get involved in skills development issues
– they see training as being an ‘HR responsibility’. But they are the ones who
really know what skills their staff need in order to do their jobs professionally
and productively. Line managers also often tend to generalise about what
training their staff need – they’ll say things like “All my staff need customer
service training”, or “Everyone must go on a supervisor course”. Your job in
these interviews is to pin them down, to find out exactly who needs training in
exactly what, against your municipal objectives!
You are also going to use these interviews to identify critical and scarce skills
– see Section 5.4 below for more information on this aspect of the interviews.
You can make these interviews easier by preparing for them. Use your notes
from the interviews in the step described above, as well as your
understanding of the municipality, to keep the discussion focussed on the line
manager’s direct area of work. You can also help by not using skills
development jargon, like ‘outcomes’ or ‘NQF level’ or ‘unit standards’ – speak
the language that the manager speaks – it is your job to then ‘translate’ this
into the WSP format! Schedule the meetings at times which are convenient
for line managers – you will probably need about an hour per manager to
conduct the interview. Explain that you are collecting information about
training needs in the municipality, in order to develop the Workplace Skills
Plan and enable the municipality to improve it’s capacity to meet service
delivery objectives. Also make sure that the managers understand that not all
training that they request will be provided – training will depend on budget
availability.
���� Use the template over the page in preparing for and conducting
the interviews with line managers. You will need a separate table
for each line manager. Add in rows as you need them!
38
1. Name of line
manager:
2. Section:
3. Date of interview:
4. IDP Objective: Write this in before the interview, including only those IDP
objectives that are relevant to the manager being interviewed
i.e. don’t try talking to the Engineering Manager about Health
objectives!
4.1 Municipal
objective &
measure of
success
Write this in before the interview, including only those Municipal
objectives and measures of success that are relevant to the
manager being interviewed
4.1.1 EE objectives
related to this
objective
Write this in before the interview, including only those EE
objectives that are relevant to the manager being interviewed
4.1.2 Who, in your
section, needs
training in
what in order
to meet this
objective?
The answer to this question must be in general terms eg. ‘All
clerks need training in XYZ computer programme’; or ‘3 drivers
need training in advanced driving skills’ etc. Make sure that all
the training needs are identified i.e. more than one group of
people might need training if a particular objective is to be
achieved. And for some objectives, no training may be
required!
4.1.3 What do they
need to know
& be able to
do as a result
of having
been on this
training?
These are your ‘outcomes’ – the information that you are likely
to give to training providers when commissioning training. Ask
managers to describe exactly how they expect people to
perform once they have been on the training – what they must
be able to do. Try and avoid generic statement – if a manager
says “they must be able to supervise people”, ask him/her
what s/he means by that, so that you are able to get a very
clear understanding of the skills gap. They also describe the
measures of success for the training objectives.
4.1.4 Can this
training be
offered
internally?
Sometimes the most effective training takes place using a
‘coaching’ format, where someone experienced coaches
another person in the skills required. Discuss whether this option
is possible with the manager.
4.1.5 Do you know
of any training
providers that
we can use?
People who work in specific fields often have an idea about
the training providers working that area. Try and get contact
details if possible.
4.2 Municipal As above
39
objective &
measure of
success
4.2.1 EE objectives
related to this
objective
As above
4.2.2 Who, in your
section, needs
training in
what in order
to meet this
objective?
As above
4.2.3 What do they
need to know
& be able to
do as a result
of having
been on this
training?
As above
4.2.4 Can this
training be
offered
internally?
As above
4.2.5 Do you know
of any training
providers that
we can use?
As above
5. IDP Objective: As above
5.1 Municipal
objective &
measure of
success
As above
5.1.1 EE objectives
related to this
objective
As above
5.1.2 Who, in your
section, needs
training in
what in order
to meet this
objective?
As above
5.1.3 What do they As above
40
need to know
& be able to
do as a result
of having
been on this
training?
5.1.4 Can this
training be
offered
internally?
As above
5.1.5 Do you know
of any training
providers that
we can use?
As above
5.2 Municipal
objective &
measure of
success
As above
5.2.1 EE objectives
related to this
objective
As above
5.2.2 Who, in your
section, needs
training in
what in order
to meet this
objective?
As above
5.2.3 What do they
need to know
& be able to
do as a result
of having
been on this
training?
As above
5.2.4 Can this
training be
offered
internally?
As above
5.2.5 Do you know
of any training
providers that
we can use?
As above
41
The information that you collect in these interviews will assist not only with
completing Section 6 of the template, but also Sections 8, 12, 13 and 14.
���� Working with the person sitting next to you, try and imagine what the
skills development objectives might be for the IDP and Municipal
Objectives listed in the table over the page. (Note that these are
examples only)
42
IDP Objective
Operational Context
Municipal Objectives
Enabling Context
Training & Skills Development Objectives
Objectives Measures of Success Objectives Measures of Success
Improve the ecological
integrity of natural water
courses
Rehabilitate the
Dorpspruit Catchment
area
Dorpspruit Catchment
area meets international
standards for natural
water courses
Implement rainwater
harvesting for irrigation
70% of peri-urban plots
use rainwater harvesting
for irrigation
Clear reeds in all natural
water courses
100% of natural water
courses are clear of
reeds
Reduce waste disposal
through waste recycling
Implement waste
separation at source in
targeted areas
50% of urban areas are
separating waste at
source
Recycling buy-back
centres established
10 buy-back centres
established
Improve level of service
to Municipal Bus
Transport users
Develop integrated fare
and ticketing plan
Integrated plan
implemented in 50% of
bus zones
Ensure safety of
passengers on buses
Crime on buses drops to
10% of users
43
Provide tarred roads
across the municipality
Tar all urban roads in the
municipality
100% of urban roads
tarred
Ensure adequate
stormwater
infrastructure
Develop a
comprehensive
Stormwater
Development &
Management System
System approved by
Council
Rehabilitate stormwater
channels
Stormwater channels
rehabilitated in 75% of
urban areas
Address pollution of
stormwater channels
All stormwater channels
free of pollution
44
5.4 Identifying Critical and Scarce Skills
This is a completely new section of the template, and one which the
Department of Labour is particularly interested in! You will have read lots of
newspaper articles about ‘the skills shortage’ in South Africa – what the DoL is
trying to do is to understand better what that skills shortage looks like, and the
information that workplaces provide through their SETAs is vital in building that
understanding.
���� Have a look at Section 7 of the Guideline “About Scarce and
Critical Skills”, and make sure that you are completely comfortable
with the definitions and concepts. In particular, you need to make
sure that you understand the difference between a ‘scarce skill’
and a ‘critical skill’. You also need to understand what makes a skill
scarce.
As stated above, you should use your interviews with line managers to help
you to complete Section 10.1 of the template. It is probably easiest if you
take this template with you to the interview, and ask the manager about the
occupation names linked directly to his/her area of work. The sections that
you are going to be focusing on are the fourth, fifth and sixth sets of columns:
� Scarce and Critical Skills
� Planned Scarce Skills or Critical Skills Training Interventions
� Number of qualified people to be imported from outside South Africa
(You will get the information for the first set of columns from your HR
Department at a later date)
���� Open up the template on your laptop and look at Section 10.1 –
make sure you understand the questions that are being asked.
45
5.5 Identifying Training Opportunities for the Unemployed
Your LED co-ordinator is the person to meet with to discuss what training is
planned to assist the unemployed in your municipal area. This information will
be used for Section 9 of the WSP – use the template to guide the discussion
with the LED Co-ordinator. Note that you also need to get an idea of the key
target group to benefit from the training, and ideas as to what employment
opportunities will be available to the trainees on completion of the training.
Note that if your LED co-ordinator is unable to supply this information at the
time of your meeting, s/he will have to collect it in time for the submission of
the WSP – discuss and set deadlines for this!
���� Open up the template on your laptop and look at Section 9. Make
sure that you are able to explain it to your LED co-ordinator.
5.6 Development of Draft Training Interventions
Having conducted your interviews, you now need to write them up. At this
stage, concentrate only on completing Section 6 of the template (but make
sure that you keep your notes from the interviews in a safe place as you will
need to go back and refer to them.) Once you have done this, you need to
present the results of your findings to the Training Committee and Senior
Managers.
���� The sample agenda over the page can be used for these
presentations – customise it to suit your needs.
46
Sample Agenda for Presentation of Draft Training Interventions
1. Welcome and Introduction
2. Overview of process to date
3. The importance of linking skills planning to organisational objectives
4. Key IDP Objectives identified
5. Key Municipal Objectives and Measures of Success identified
6. Training interventions identified
7. Links to employment equity
8. Discussion on proposed training interventions
9. Way forward
10. Closure
47
5.7 Researching Training Opportunities, Vendors & Costs
Once you have an idea about what training you need to provide, you need
to look at who will be able to provide that training. You have a number of
options to consider when selecting training, including:
� In-house or external?
� Formal or informal?
� Credit-bearing or non credit-bearing?
� Qualification?
You will need to make decisions based on the following factors:
� type of outcomes that you want to achieve
� equipment needed to provide training
� training budget available
� expectations of learners
� internal capacity to provide training
� time available to attend training
The best way to start is by getting as much information as possible – finding
out who is available to provide the training that you need, and what it will
cost.
First start by looking at what training you are likely to be able to provide in-
house – unless you are a very large municipality with an internal training
academy, most in-house training will be of the coaching type: where an
‘expert’ works with another employee to train them in the skills required. This
training is often very effective, as the trainee gains the skills in a ‘real world’
environment, and benefits from one-on-one attention. Your interviews with
line managers can help you to identify these type of training opportunities.
The next set of activities is to research external training providers. You should
have a record of providers that you have used in the past – if you were
48
satisfied with their services, then speak to them again. You could also phone
around to SDFs in other municipalities in your area, or the District Municipality
SDF, to find out what their experiences of particular training providers have
been. The LGSETA keeps a list of accredited training providers – see their
web-site or phone 011 456 8579 and ask to speak to the ETQA manager
(Remember that other SETA ETQAs will have a list of accredited providers in
their areas of specialisation – for example, if you are looking for a provider of
financial management training, you might want to try the FASSET.)
���� What other ways can you think of to get information on training
providers?
When we are commissioning training from providers, it is essential that you are
as specific as possible – one of the reasons that people lose faith in training is
because we send staff on courses and then find afterwards that their
performance has not improved at all! Unless the provider used was especially
hopeless, this is usually the result of not having been clear on the type of
training required.
���� Use the template over the page to request information on training
programmes. You can adapt it to meet your specific requirements.
49
Request for Quotation on Training Services
This is an example of the kind of information required when requesting
quotations. You may need to request more, or different information from
prospective providers. Please remember however, that you must be sure that
you adhere to your municipality’s procurement processes and requirements.
The [insert name] Municipality requests information on the following training,
which it is considering providing to municipal employees. Note that this is a
request for a quotation only, and does not constitute any agreement to
purchase any training.
Training Area: Insert the generic type of training here eg. Customer
service, ABET, Management etc
Generic profile of
participants:
Include information such as job titles, average
educational qualifications etc here
Total no. of
employees requiring
training
This would be the number of employee requiring this
particular training.
Specific learning
outcomes:
This is the information that you would have got from
the line managers – what must people know and be
able to do as a result of having been on the training.
Be as specific as possible – don’t say ‘labour relations’,
say ‘Apply the Labour Relations Act within a municipal
context’ OR ‘Conduct a disciplinary hearing using the
XYZ Municipality’s discipline management procedures’
In-house or external: Say whether you want the training to be conducted at
your premises or at an outside venue
The training provider must provide at least the following information to allow
you to make an assessment of their capacity to offer the training programme
you require. However, further information is required by procurement
regulations. Please talk to your supply chain/ procurement/ finance dept to
ensure that you request all the information necessary in terms of procurement
regulations and policies:
Name of Provider:
Telephone No:
eMail Address:
50
Accreditation No:
ETQA with which
accredited:
Details of proposed
course:
Will the course be
customised? Please
give details:
What is the course
duration?
How many separate
programmes will be
run to
accommodate the
trainee numbers?
Is the course aligned
to unit standard(s)?
If yes, please give
unit standard
number(s):
Will successful
completion of the
course result in a
qualification?
If yes, please give
qualification name:
What assessment
activities are
included in the
course?
Total cost (inc. VAT)
51
5.8 Prioritising
You now have a long list of training requirements, and a long list of possible
providers, so you need to prioritise! In prioritising, we need to balance
objectives with resources – what do we need to achieve, and what can we
achieve with the resources available to us. We know what we need to
achieve – the long list of training requirements, and so we need to balance
this against our available resources. The first thing that you need to do is to
check the likely training budget for the forthcoming year – do this in discussion
with your CFO and other senior managers. The other major resource
constraint that you are likely to face is time – how much time can the various
categories of employees spend away from their workplaces?
There is no simple or easy method of prioritising which training interventions
you are going to be able to offer in the forthcoming year, but some of the
issues that you need to consider include:
� Which are the most important municipal objectives that you have to
achieve (go back to your notes from your meeting with the IDP co-
ordinator) – training linked to these will be high priority.
� Which categories of employees are significantly under-represented in
relation to your EE profile (go back to your notes from your meeting with
your EE co-ordinator) – training which benefits these people will be high
priority.
� What training is required to meet your disability targets (go back to the
notes from the meeting with your disability co-ordinator) – improving
numbers of disabled people working in municipalities (and other
workplaces) is a national priority.
� What training falls into the local government sector priority areas – go
back to Section 6. These skills are in short supply in municipalities as a
whole, so will probably be priority areas.
� What training is required in scarce skills areas – go back and review the
scarce skills table.
52
� What training falls into the LGSETA’s Discretionary Grant priority areas
(see section 10.2 of the template) – you may receive discretionary grants
for training in these areas, which will help to off-set costs. However,
please remember that you must apply for a discretionary grant, and
have approval of your grant application from the LGSETA BEFORE you
begin training.
� What training was provided last year, and who benefited from it? You
want to spread the benefit of training across as many groups as possible,
and not concentrate your training spend with just a few people or levels
of the organisation. You should receive additional guidance from your
municipality’s Human Resource Development Policy.
���� Can you think of any other factors which you will consider in
prioritising training programmes?
53
5.9 Completing the WSP
Your prioritising exercise should result in the development of a ‘shortlist’ of
training programmes that you are going to offer in the forthcoming year. This
is the list that you will use to complete the balance of the WSP.
You need to work through the template systematically, completing all the
sections. Remember to type only in the white areas, and use the summary
calculations at the end of most of the workshops to check that you are on
target in relation to the LGSETA’s quality objectives.
���� Take some time to go through the Guideline, checking that you
understand how it is laid out, and what the various sections mean. If
you have any questions, don’t hesitate to ask your facilitator for
assistance!
5.10 Getting Sign-off
Remember that the WSP should be signed off by the Training Committee and
the Municipal Manager, and Council needs to have seen the WSP before it is
submitted to the LGSETA. In doing this, you can present the ‘Executive
Summary’, which shows key elements of the WSP, but you may also need to
circulate the full WSP to all members of the Training Committee and Senior
Management – they will provide guidance as to the amount of detail that
they require.
54
Section 6: Implementation
5.1 Contracting with Providers
We would recommend that you contract with providers for the first half of the
financial year in July, and for the second half of the financial year in
November. Your municipality will have specific procurement and contracting
regulations, which you will have to follow in this process.
5.2 Developing a Training Schedule
The WSP is a high level plan outlining the overall picture of planned training in
a municipality. Depending on the number of employees in your municipality,
you may find it necessary to develop a more detailed training schedule,
which shows who is scheduled to attend which training, when. A training
schedule of this nature will also assist you to keep track of training
interventions. The training schedule should show:
� Name of course
� Date of course
� Provider
� Venue
� Participant details:
o Name
o Employee Number
o Department
o Contact No.
���� The template over the page is done in Word. However, you should
consider doing your schedule in Excel as it will be less cramped! An
Excel template is also included in the electronic files.
55
Course Name
Course Date
Provider Venue
Participant Details
Start End Name Employee No Department Contact No
56
Section 7: Reporting
7.1 Quarterly Monitoring of the WSP
Note that the LGSETA recommends that you complete quarterly reports.
Doing the quarterly reports will assist you in completing your Annual Training
Report, particularly if you are from a large municipality. We therefore propose
that you complete Sections 3, 8 and 11 of the template at the end of
September, December and March each year.
���� Open up the template on your laptop and look at these sections.
See also the Index, which shows which sections can be completed
for the quarterly report.
7.2 Annual Training Report
The Annual Training Report needs to be submitted by 30th June every year.
The following sections need to be completed for your Annual Report:
� 1.4
� 2 (only if SDF changed)
� 3
� 4.1
� 5.1
� 8
� 9
� 10.2
� 11
� 12
� 13
� 14
���� Check these sections in the Template, and make sure that you are
happy about completing them.
Remember that your Annual Training Report also needs to be signed off by the
Training Committee and the Municipal Manager.